Singer outline Notes for September 1–4

Goal and strategy

Singer is trying to show that the wealthy should do more to help those who are desperately needy, such as those suffering from famine. More generally, he wants to show that we are mistaken in thinking that morality does not typically require us to make significant sacrifices in cases like these. We think that giving to famine relief is a good thing to do but optional. Singer thinks it is mandatory: morality requires us to save others, just as it requires us not to kill others.

He argues for this conclusion by proposing an analogy between the victims of famine and a drowning child who can be rescued at little cost: getting muddy pants.

The strategy goes like this: most of us believe we would be morally obligated to save the child and the two cases are similar in the relevant ways, therefore, we should accept the conclusion that we ought to do more to help people suffering from famine.

Brief outline

Introduction to the problem (pp. 229-31)

Two versions of the principle he wants to defend and the basic argument in its favor (231-2).

Objections to Singer’s basic argument for his principle: the famine case is unlike the drowning child case (232-5).

Radical consequence of the argument: many acts that, according to commonsense ideas of morality, are merely matters of charity are in fact moral duties (235-6)

Objections to the principle itself. The objections maintain that an argument that conflicts too much with our commonsense understanding of charity and duty must be mistaken. Singer argues that we should admit that our commonsense understanding of these matters is indefensible (236-9).

Objections to the practical steps Singer recommends. These objections accept the idea that we’re required to give to those in need but they express doubts about whether privately provided famine relief will meet this goal. The “third point” isn’t really an objection but more of a question: how much should we give? (239-43)

Facts

Where is East Bengal and what happened in 1971?

Answer: it’s called Bangladesh now. Here’s the history of the conflict Singer was writing about.

MORE than 20 million people in Africa are at risk of famine in conditions which the head of the World Food Program describes as the worst in his experience.

James Morris, the executive director of the United Nations food aid organisation, was in London to warn that millions of people in Kenya, Somalia, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Tanzania were at risk.

Moreover, foreign aid has plummeted following the end of the cold war.

“The 21 rich countries of the OECD gave a record low share of their national income in overseas aid in 1997. Only four countries met the UN target of 0.7% of their GDP.”

Source: The Economist, 6-12 February, 1999

This is unfortunate because we now have some evidence that foreign aid actually works to alleviate poverty and other sources of human misery. (The reference is to an article that may not be publicly available. The full citation is: Gregg Easterbrook, “Safe Deposit: the case for foreign aid” The New Republic July 29, 2002. Of course, an article in a weekly news magazine is not the same thing as a scholarly study; whether foreign aid is a success or not is a controversial issue that I am not competent to resolve.)